GENEVA – Chefs, muralists, cyclists and even a pop-up orchestra led millions of people around the world in celebratory events to mark World Refugee Day, at a time when the number of men, women and children uprooted by wars and persecution has broken records.

The event, which falls each year on June 20, salutes the courage and endurance of those who have been forced to flee their homes. Many are also showing they stand #WithRefugees by signing UNHCR’s petition. Check back here throughout the day for updates.

A ‘Refugees Got Talent’ contest has amplified World Refugee Day celebrations in Egypt, giving young and old the chance to express themselves through art and music. UNHCR provides vital assistance to more than 200,000 refugees and asylum-seekers in Egypt

Today @ghazalmia is taking over UNHCR’s Instagram feed. Maya is a refugee from Damascus, Syria who has become a role model and a spokesperson for young refugees since seeking shelter in the UK in September 2015.

To promote friendship, tolerance and inclusion towards refugees, UNHCR Belarus asked children to draw on the theme We Are Different, We Are Together. They received 1,200 submission from across the country, the best of which were shown in an exhibition in Minsk on World Refugee Day.

Addressing the faithful from a window in the Vatican, Pope Francis said: “Today more than ever we must stand with refugees.” He added: “We should also remember in our prayers how many of them have lost their lives in the sea or in exhausting land journeys.” The pontiff continued: “Their stories of pain and hope can become opportunities for fraternal encounter and true mutual knowledge.” Meeting refugees in person dispelled any fears and “distorted ideologies” about them, he said.

In an expression of solidarity with refugees, urban artists in northern Mexico painted a mural spelling out the word "bienvenidos" - which means “welcome” in Spanish. In recent years Mexico has become a place of refuge for thousands of families fleeing street gang violence in the north of Central America. The artists, known as "Tripulaczion," painted the work on one of the most transited avenues in the city of Saltillo.

With a few dance moves and a beaming smile, a young Syrian refugee celebrates at Ramadan Village in Beirut. Six years of conflict have driven 5.1 million Syrians to seek refuge abroad, more than 1 million of them in Lebanon.

In a sporting celebration of World Refugee Day, football teams made up of Moroccan and refugee players competed in a tournament in Rabat. Over the past three weeks, eight teams from across Morocco have taken part in the tournament. The final is scheduled for Friday.

A video featuring UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Jung Woo-sung on a mission in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq plays on a large screen outside Seoul City Hall. The video featuring the model, actor and director will run there through June 30.

About 500 cyclists put on helmets and pedalled through the streets of Lalitpur, Nepal, on Saturday in solidarity with refugees. The Himalayan kingdom has itself suffered massive displacement, after more than half a million people lost their homes in an eqrthquake in April 2015.

In a dazzling display of support for World Refugee Day in Iraq, artists, forcibly displaced youngsters and their host communities got together to paint murals in celebration of a shared humanity. They included a bear and its cub emerging from a waterfall in Sulaymaniyah, a shimmering peacock in Duhok and a flower-daubed deer in Erbil.

Chad, southern region

Celebrations to mark World Refugee Day got off to a brisk start in Chad, with a game of wheelchair basketball. Chad hosted more than 391,000 refugees at the end of last year.

Ukrainians dancers and musicians showed their support for refugees at an outdoor concert in Mariupol at the weekend. Some two million people have been displaced by conflict in eastern Ukraine since 2014. The city recently faced rocket attacks and electricity cuts that left thousands without vital services in freezing temperatures.

Eighty-four restaurants are taking part in this year’s much expanded Refugee Food Festival, now being held in 13 European cities across six countries. Running through June 30, it gives refugee chefs from countries such as Afghanistan, Eritrea, Iran, Somalia, Syria and Ukraine the chance to tempt European diners with dishes from home. Last year the festival took place in Paris and Strasbourg.

As a prelude to World Refugee Day in Sweden, UNHCR organized a pop-up philharmonic concert for passers-by in central Stockholm. The concert was performed by the El Sistema Sweden Dream Orchestra, an NGO that works with newly arrived asylum-seeking children and uses music as a way of helping them to integrate. Most of the youngsters had never played an instrument before joining the orchestra.